bas been to nominate him. —TAFT certainly ought to be able to keep the lid down in Caba. He is the! heaviest man the President bad for the as- | signment. i —The man who can’t find a little time to talk politics these days must certainly be one of the wise (?) ones who are going short on the market. —It was too bad that the rain came yes- terday for the Grangers had certainly a fine layout at their picnic and were prepared to entertain a great crowd. —Joe Husrtox didn’t do so bad on the state capitol. For being its architect he received $350,000. It is no wonder that a great building can make a man now-a- days. ~The one thing that HoMER CASTLE and Dr. SWALLOW seem to have forgotten in their campaigning is Probibition, which really is their only excnse to be campaign- ing at all. —What is the use of talking abont re- form in Pennsylvania if a reform Legisla- ture is not to be eleoted. JOHN NOLL must be elected if Centre intends doing her duty in the present contest. —~-Mayor WEAVER, of Philadelpbia, seems very much cut up because his friend SHROYER was defeated for nomination for district attorney. It should be a great com- fort to the Mayor that he was beaten by as good a man as GIBBONY. —The Baltimorean who mailed President ROOSEVELT a ten pound block of ice Ie- cently must have thought there is a danger of TEDDY'S spoiling. Or, possibly, he sent itas a reminder that the President should keep cool in the Caban affair. —It Farmer CREASY doesn’t get every farmer vote in Centre county then our farmers have no right to talk about reduced taxation and equal rights. He certainly is their champion and has given the best years of hie life to fighting their battles. —In the Arabic there are said to be six hundred words for camel aod while we are not up on Arabic just now we are willing to bet a reformed spelling book against a volapuk primer that five bundred and pinety-nine of them are cuss words. —Now that you are the regular Repabli- can nominee for the Senate in this district there are just two questions we would like to ask yon Mr. QUIGLEY : Are you for or against the machine? If elected will you cast your vote for Boise PENROSE in the event that he is a candi- date for United States Senator to succeed himseil ? —Every day the election of EMERY seems wore certain. The fact that the new personal registration law will probably be the cause of the loss of two hundred thousand voters in the various cities of the State and as most of these are supposed to be gang-controlled it means that the re. form candidates will be minus that bhandi- cap in the contest. ~—It is really amusing how easily our friend Harter of the Gazette gets stirred up. In truth, that is one of the reasons we en- joy stirring bim so much. He complains because we do not have ‘a kindly feeling’ for him in his fight for the post-office; in all of which be is entirely mistaken be- cause the very best thing that could hap- pen the Democratic party in Centre county would be to have him get that plnm from the Republicans. ~The new ten million dollar capitol will be dedicated on October 4th. President RooseEVELT will make an address and DaMroscH’s orchestra will play. It cer- tainly sounds great and quite in keeping with a reat State like Pennsylvania, but isn’t it the irony of fate that the architect of the great building should be suffering with a broken ueck at the very mement of bis crowning trinmph. Yes, the brass in Joe's neck wasn’t strong enough to stand the straio and it broke. Poor JoE. ~The advantage of baving an hcnest man io the State Treasurer's office has been made mauifest again. Do you think the public would ever have known that the new capitol cost six million dollars more than the amount appropriated if Mr. BERRY bad not been in a position to find it ont and tell the people of the State of the enormous swindle. Had LEE Pru. MER been in the State Treasurer’s office you may rest assured that the whole thing would have been smothered and the public would have continued under the impres. sion that the building cost only four mil. lion. ~The nomination of Mr. HENRY CUTE QUIGLEY for Senator by the machine Re- publicans is equivalent to serving notice on Judge LovE that he is a has been in Cen. tre connty politics. While Love and the few petty leaders he can control were un- deniably against QUIGLEY they were afraid to come out in the open and inasmuch as his nomination was made possible by PEN- ROSE'S action in sending additional oon- ferees into the dead-locked conference there can be no doubt as to where PENROSE stands as between LOVE and the new leader of the Centre county Republicans. Of course Mr. QUIGLEY will not be elected, but he bas demonstrated his party strength by having bad himsell nominated single handed, because he knows, only too well, that he received no aid whatever from the —Well, it is quite certain that it wou't | be as hard te elect our next Senator as it] _YOL.51 down-and-out bosses of the county. An Unfit Candidate. m— RosBerr K. YOUNG, the Republican candidate for Auditor General, has been attorney for the capitol building commis- sion ever since its organization. It was his duty to admonish the commission against the violation of the constitution aod the laws. He was morally as well as legally bound to prevent the expenditure of the public money except in the manner pre- scribed in the statute. He knew the ap- propriation for the completion of the new capitol was limited to $4,000,000. Unless he is a born imbecile, moreover, he must have known that spending the fall amount of the appropriation for the walls and roof of the building was a violation of the law. Yet be permitted the capitol! building com- mission to commit that folly, though he too bad taken an oath to ‘‘support, obey and defend’ the constitution. The principal duty of the Auditor Gen- eral is to safe-guard the public fands and prevent the unlawful expenditure of the moneys collected from the people. He holds to the state government practically the same relationship which Mr. Youne held to the capitol building commission as its attorney. Would any sane man, unin- fluenced by party prejudices, select for that office a man whose misfeasance in a similar position had just been revealed. The chances are that it was his delinquency in the matter in point that recommended Mr. YOUNG to the machine managers for the office of Auditor General. They reasoned that having permitted looting in one office he would not be likely to object to it in another. Men are judged by their actions as well as by the company they keep and having served the looters in one office was a recommendation for another. The people of Pennsylvania want to get rid of these official misfits. Asa matter of fact they bave come to realize that there must be reform in the public service or ruin becomes inevitable. As QUAY knew PENNYPACKER and nomivated him for Governor hecanse he could fool the public by that expedient, so PENROSE knew YouxG and hoped tbe public wouldn't find him out until after the election. But State Treasurer BERRY got on the inside, discovered the iniquity and exposed it. The public now understands why YOUNG, protessiig® be a reformer, is favored by the machine. He is one of the machine men in disguise. DURHAM couldo’t bave done better if he had been counsel for the commission. MeNicHOL couldn't bave served the machiue to better purpose. Mr. Gompers Wrong Again, President GOMPERS of the American Federation of Labor is, we very much fear, organizing another defeats. That is to say, if current reports are accurate be is pre- paring to repeat in Illinois his failure in Maine. In other words having failed to defeat Representative LITTLEFIELD in Maine be now proposes to tackle the in- finitely more difficult task of defeating Josern G, CANNON in Illincis. He will fail, of course, for various reasons, and the enemies of labor will say, as they did after the Maine episode, that Mr. GOMPERS’ mistake was a vindication of CANNON'S course in opposition to labor legislation. As a matter of fact, however, it will be nothing of the kind. Mr. CaxxoxN has represented his district in Congress for thirty years. He personal- ly kpows every voter in toe district and by his free and easy manner with thew bas made himself immensely popular. At the last election be received 30,550 votes out of a total of 49,273. His plurality over his Democratic opponent was 15,382 and the Prohibition and Socialist vote combined only totaled 3,555. The hopelessness of a fight against such odds must be obvious to any reasoving mind. If the district were an industrial centre, it might be different. But it is an agricultural region and the voters take comparatively little interest in legislation in the special interest of labor. Mr. GompreErs made a splendid fight against LITTLEFIELD in Maine bot as we said at the outset of it,it was hopeless from the beginning. He will probably put up an equally masterful campaign against CANNON in Illinois with precisely the same result. Bat if he would direct his energies and expend his efforts to the defeat of in- conspicuous and unimportant Republican candidates for Congress in close districts where the labor vote is strong he might make certain the overthrow of the Republican majority in the House, defeat CANNON for speaker and guarantee just labor legisla. tion througu the medinm of a Democratic majority. This district is a case in point and Mr. GoMPERES ought to take notice. — Iu order that the competition may be purely local the managers of the Great Centre County Fair have decided that in the poultry exhibit only birds grown and owned by Centre county people will be entered for premiums. Of dourse there will be the usual great exhibit of poultry from some of the large New York poultry farms, but they will not be in competition for the premiums. Looting of the Treasury. When State Treasurer BERRY announced in a recent speech that the new State capitol at Harrisburg had cost nearer ten than four million dollars, be shocked the thoughtful people of the Commonwealth. The amount fixed by law for the comple- tion of the building was $4,000,000. It was felt by those who ha! examived the structure that splendid results bad been achieved for the money. There could bave been no graft, it wae reasoned, for the magnificent building was sorth every penny of the price, and when finally the building commission announced the cover- ing into the treasury of a considerable bal- ance, the pepular impulse was to shout “‘well done, good and faithful servants.” The statement of Mr. BERRY, however, revealed the fact that it was a false and fraudulent pretense. But what Mr. BERRY said is literally trae. Careful investigation exposes the fact that the $4,000,000 expended by the commission simply paid for the walls and the roof. They are good walls and the roof looks substantial, though there are rumors that inferior materials have heen used in its construction. But if the walls had been of the best and the roof a model of excellence, $4,000,000 was too much to pay for them. Every member of the com- mission must have grafted like a pirate to use up the appropriation in the walls and the roof. At least hall the amount must bave been stolen and the building mis- sioners may be set down as the monumental public thieves of the age. They have rob- bed or wasted to an unparalleled extent. But the building commissioners are not alone culpable. The Commissioners of Public Buildings and Grounds are equally guilty. The board was composed, at the time of the operations,of Governor PENNY- PACKER, Aunditor General SNYDER and State Treasurer MATTHUES. Each of these gentlemen had taken a solemn oath that he would ‘‘support, obey and defend’’ the constitution of the State. That instrument forbids the expenditure of money ‘‘except on appropriations made by law.” There- fore in spending nearly $6,000,000 of the public fonds which had not been so ap- propriated the members of the board not only perjured themselves but committ the crime of robbery. That iniquity fixes the moral standard of Governor PENNY. PACKER. His pretense of honesty has vanished. Nomination of Focht The nomination of BENJAMIN K. FocHT for Representative in Congress by the Re- publicans of the Seventeenth district is an insult to the public oonscience. Mr. FOCHT represents all that is evil in poli- tics. As Representative iv the Legislature be participated in every iniquity of that period and as State Senator his record is equally infamous. He supported the press muzzler, the franchise grabs, the various water-snake measures and the atrocious ballot bill, which he badn’t brains enough to prepare but had the assurance to adopt. He was foremost in every legislative in- iquity of his time. The nomination of FOCHT is a challenge to the decent element of the district. It is a menace to the integrity of publio life. Of course it never would have happened in a district in which the political margin was parrow. But at the last election THAD. MaAnoN bad 9,523 plurality over 0. C. BOWERS, a gentleman of the highest cbar- acter, and that led to the impression, prob- ably, that the voters of the district would stand for anything. The nomination of FocHT will put the conjecture to the test. He is about the limit. If they will vote for him they are beyond the hope of rescue from evil. There ought to be some way of prevent- ing so great a misfortane to the reputation of the State as his election necessarily in- volves. In the Nineteenth district the op- ponents of the machine have fused on a de- cent Republican with practical certainty of defeating the renegade nominee of the organization. If elected he will probably vote against CANNON for Speaker and op- pose some of the iniquities of the machine. That will be the half loaf ‘‘that is better than no bread.”’ A similar arrangement in the Seventeeth district would certainly avert the shame of the election of FocHT. It ought to be tried. The ———Centre county farmers will be es- pecially interested in knowing that the coming great fair in Centre county will at- ford an opportunity of comparing the pro- duots of their own farms and gardens with those of another State. The Norfolk and Western R. R. Co. through its agricultural and industrial agent, Mr. F. H. LaBaume, has decided to make a display of the pro- duots of the State of Virginia and has asked for a large section of the exhibition build- ing for that purpose. This will be an es- pecially interesting display because a num- ber of Centre county farmers have already migrated to Virginia and their friends and neighbors here will be glad to see how pro- ductive the soil of their adopted State is. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. ‘BELLEFONTE, PA., SEPTEMBER 21, 1906. Disgrace to Columbia County. It is said that some personal enemies of Wai. T. CREASY in Columbia county have brought out an independent Democratic candidate for the Legislature in the hope of defeating that champion of the people for re-election to the General Assembly. It will be remembered that before Mr. CREASY'S nomiuvation by the Democratic State convention he had been unanimously nominated in Columbia county for re- election to the Legislature. No candidate contested with him for the nomination be- cause every man in the county koew it would be useless. When he was subse- quently nominated for Auditor General the State party leaders urged him to re- main on the legislative ticket and he re- luctantly consented to do so. For years Representative CREASY bas been contending in the Legislature for cer- tain reforms. The trolley freight idea is his, the two cent a mile railroad fare is his notion and the return to the counties of certain taxes not needed by the State and which will relieve the pecple of heavy local burdens is his idea. They have been op- posed by-the Republican machine hereto- fore but are promised in the Republican platform now. It is the consensus of opin- ion among Democratic leaders, however, that the purpose is to enact inadequate wmeascres and they have urged CREASY to go back to the Legielatare in order to force real reforms. Though his election as Audi- tor General is certain he can serve in the House until the first of May and complete the work in that time. Since the opening of the State campaign Mr. CREASY has been necessarily absent from home. Taking advantage of that fact certain political gorillas have under- taken to put a candidate in the field against bim for the Legislature. It is a most cowardly and execrable trick. If be were home they would no more think of such a thing than a tit-mouse would think of at- tacking a lion. But while he is absent in the service of the Democratic party these poltroons hope to divert enough of votes from him to elect the Republican candidate, They are his personal enemies and the peo- ple love him because he has such enemies. Bat it is a disgrace to Columbia county bat they exist there. Edwin 8, Staart's Delusion. EpwiN 8. StuarRT formal opened his campaign in a speech in the Academy of Music, Philadelphia, on Saturday. The meeting was managed by the notorious VARE brothers, who as municipal contrac- tors have been looting the city for years. The old ‘‘organization’’ forces were out in the old form and one might easily have im- agined that the machine had resumed busi- ness at the old stand. Of course DURHAM was absent. He is in California for health and safety, as yet, but hopes for better things. Bat McNicHoL was on band and HaypPy MOORE was conspicuons and PETER BoyD was present so that probably it was just as well that DURHAM couldn't ‘lend hig presence’’ to grace the occasion. Mr. STUART'S speech was characteristic. It was amiable in tone and promising in the extreme. It endorsed every word of the platform of the Republican State couven- tion aud the candidate pretended to take them and himself seriously. He was al- most as solemn as PENNYPACKER who four ;'ears ago made precisely the same pledges and forgot them before the votes were counted. PENNY fooled the public because his previous record had been to some extent in line with his promises. Bat STUART never in his whole life bas given a word in encouragement of reform either in administration or legislation. He has invariably been obedient to the machine and everybody knows that he always will be. The adwinistration of PENNYPACKER is an admonition against she election of Stu- ART. No public official had ever been more generous in promises of improvement and we believe that no man ever was more sincere. But he didn’t properly estimate the strength of the machine or the weak- ness of the individual. The State has never had a Governor as subservient to the wachine and no candidate for the office was as determined in declaring the op- posite purpose. Mr. STUART occupies a precisely similar position. He imagines that after the election his wishes will be respected, but as a matter of fact they will not even be considered except in so far as they are in accord with the plans of the machine. -—The wany friends of Randolph Breese in this place will be pleased to learn that he has been appointed assistant master mechanic of the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago railroad, with headquarters at Fort Wayne, Ohio. The appointment was en- tirely unsolicited, being made because the officials believed it merited and that he was the right man for the place. This is the same position that George L. Potter, now third vice president of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, first filled with the P. F. W. & C. railroad. Quigley Nominated for State Senator. At the Republican senatorial cenference held in Philipsburg, last Saturday afternoon, Henry C. Quigley Esq., of this place, was nominated for State Senator on the second ballot. At the conference on Taoesday of last week it was decided to ap- peal to the State committee for the appoint. ment of two extra conferees, as provided by the rules of the party, inasmuch as the conference had been deadlocked for more than a mooth. Consequently Harry Kel- ler, of this place, was appointed the extra conferee from Centre county, and W. L. Snyder was appointed extra conferee from Clearfield county. At Saturday’s con- ference the first ballot stood four for Quig- ley and four for Alexander but on the sec- ond ballot Quigley was nominated by re. ceiving the vote of Snyder, of Clearfield county, and the four votes of the Centre county conferees. His nomination was then made unanimous. ——On Wednesday Mrs. Nora McClain, of north Allegheny street, was just eighty- seven years old and the fact is all the more interesting because she is the oldest woman in Bellefonte and still bale and hearty, Owing to the recent death of her son Austin the event was not celebrated but quite a number of her neighbors called to felicitate with her upon her anniversary, It is hoped that the aged lady may live many more years to enjoy such bright birthdays. Gangs Exclusive Property. From the Altoona Times. Exceedingly bad taste was displayed hy the state capitol commission when it ex. tended an invitation to Mr. Stuart to bea guest on the occasion of the dedication of the state house, while Mr. Emery was en. tirely ignored. It serves to give the im- pression that the capitol, instead of being the property of the whole people of Penn- sylvania, is reserved exclusively for the Republicans, or that portion denominated as gangsters. For a good many years this class has regarded not only the offices of the State, but the state Joperty as well, as their exolusive prey. ey bave been in complete control and there ie no gainsaying that they have made the beet of it. But since the gang bas made a profession of a change of beart and an outward show of righteousness and a regard for the rights of those not embraced in its exelesive coterie of conecienceless rascals, it should have carried out the farce to the extent of ac- cording Mr. Emery the same consideration that was accorded Mr. Stuart. ge inention is to uke the dedication of the capitol serve the political purposes of the machine. It Ee te op- portunity of getting a whack at the public treasury, for the State will bear the expense of the celebration. Mr. Stuart will be there and so will Penrose, McNichol, and all the other big and little machine bosses and hangers-on. Mr. Emery won't be present, at least officially, for he might, perbaps, say something that would disturb the peace of mind of those who are engi- neering the job. It would be very em- barrassing il in the presence of the as- sembled multitude, some one might inad- vertently refer to the six millions of dol- lars that have been concealed in the edifice, after the statement was made that the ex- penses had been kept within the appro- papiation of $4,000,000. r. Emery need not worry over the slight. All the signs indicate that he will have av office in the imposing pile next year, and then be can look around to his heart's desire. This may be Mr. Stuart's last chance to have a look-in officially, and he may make the most of the opportunity. A Changed tssne. From the Johnstown Democrat. There is certainly something very funny about the Maine election. In the ‘‘good old days’’ our antiquated political parents are ¢o fond of referring to, it was always considered that the union would follow any example set by Maine in elections. This has gone out of style in these later years yet when Maine is to vote all eyes are turn- ed io that direction, and the balloting is watched with great interest. In the cam- paign that has just closed, most of the ‘big guos’’ of the Republican party were called on for assistance. Their eloquence and logic were on tap for the g. o. p., and they made the pine woods ring with their ora- tory. There were Taft, Lodge and Can- pon, Beveridge and a host of others. The burden of the song of all these was that the only issue in the campaign was the admin- istration of President Roosevelt. The vot- ers were told over and over that the Presi- dent was on trial before the people and they ought to give him a rousing endorse. ment. The oratory ceased and the bal- loting came on. The ballots bad not all been counted until it was discovered there had been a very decided slump in the Re- publican vote, although the number of votes cast was much larger than four years before. The funny part of it now came to front. It would not do to let it be said the le had gone back on the President, 80 his friends at once discovered that pro- hibition was the issue and not the Presi. dent, and that it was prohibition that bad caused the great loss to the Republicans. Focht's Claim on the Gang. From the Harrisburg Star-Independent, Mr. Focht's principal achievement, while a member of the Senate, was the ration of the present bal- ot upon the voters of the State and re- tention of the cause in the Quay ballot law which permits indiscriminate assistance to the voter under cover of which bri can be committed in the election booth. He is, no doubt, an ideal canlidate—for the ma- e. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. Spawls from the Keystone, ~One Schuylkill valley farmer has al- ready gathered 7,000 heads of cabbage from his patch, ~The assessors of Perry county have con- cluded their labors and have discovered that there are 6,465 voters in that county. —For the sum of $8,000 Josiah B. Hoffman has purchased the entire village of Hillegass, Montgomery county, excepting one double house, —Ex-Councilman Samuel Cocklin, of Cum- berland county, has been sent to jail for two years and sentenced to pay £400 fine for em- bezzling $400 in tax money. —Dr. J. H. Funk, of Boyertown, declares that his peach crop, instead of being a fail- ure, is twice as large as at first anticipated and that it will reach 3,000 bushels. ~Charles Williams, tax collector of Gibson township, Cameron county, was waylaid Wednesday and robbed of £600, which he nyo to Emporium to deposit ina —George Daugherty, of East Liverpool, Perry county, a student at Juniata College, Huntingdon, fell from a freight train Sun. day and was instantly killed. His body was terribly mangled. —The chestnut crop in Clinton county this year promises to be large and will bring hundreds of dollars into the pockets of those who make a business of gathering them each autumn as a means of profit, ~The Reading Coal and Iron company has determined to clear all the mine workings in the Heckscherville valley of water to make available large coal deposits which have been covered in drowned.out workings for years. ~—While addressing a jury in the court room at Smethport, on Saturday, Eugene Mullen, one of McKean county's most prom- inent citizens, was seized with a sinking spell which terminated in bis death on Sun- day afternoon. —Recent sales of farms ir Montgomery county show a remarkable depreciation in value. One farm of eighty acres, having a grist mill and other buildings on it, which brought $33,000 twenty years ago, has just been sold at public sale for $8,000. —Mount Joy lays claim to be the home of the oldest and heaviest twin teachers in the State. They are Mame and Louisa Kuhns, born fifty-three years ago, teaching in the Mount Joy schools for thirty-six years and weighing an aggregate of 501 pounds. —C, Curtis Snyder, a Williamsport carpen- ter who fell twenty feet off a roof over a year ago, and broke bis back, has so far re- covered that he can get around in a wheeled chair. His limbs are paralyzed but he ex- pects to walk with the aid of crutches. At first it was thought he would die. —At a special session of the Gallitzin school board held Thursday evening it was decided to close the schools until the ques- tion of whether or not there were cases of diphtheria amoung the pupils had been de- cided. It was reported that several of the 4 scholars were ill with the disease. —0On Wednesday last Irvin Winkleman, of Flemington, Clinton county, left his home on a fishing expedition. He had been miss. ing ever since until last Saturdesy morning, when his body was found in Bald Eagle creek, near Mill Hall. A number of rela- tives of the deceased live in Centre county. ~Chief of Police Cassidy, of Mt. Union, shot and killed Edgar Smith, a negro of Huntingdon, last Friday, in Mt. Union. Smith was charged with threatening the life of a citizeu, and when the officer attempted to arrest him Smith drew a revolver, but before be could use it Officer Cassidy shot him. The coroner's jury exonerated Cas- sidy. —Residents of Cumbler's Heights, » small village between Harrisburg and Highspire, awoke Tuesday morning to find that 26 houses had been entered and looted between midnight and 3.30 in the morning. The robbers broke into cellar windows and jim- mied their way to the upper floors, where they secured money in every home, but in no case over $10, —In the baru of a hotel at St. Clairsville, Bedford county, R. H. Willhide, a stove agent, found a wallet containing checks for $6,000 and 81,700 in money of all denomi- nations, amounting, all told, to $7700. In the hotel office be found the owner, a Hol- lidaysburg man. Willbide turned the money over to him, but the only reward was an in- vitation to visit him in Hollidaysbhurg. ~The annual meeting aud reunion of the Thirteenth Penusylvania Cavalry Associa- tion will be held in the court house at Hunt- ingdon, Thursday, October 18th, at 2 p. m,, to be followed by a camp fire at the same place in the evening. Captain P. D. Brick- er, of Jersey Shore, Lycoming county, is president of the association and Lewis Mec Makin, of Philadelphia, is the secretary. —Warren is preparing to entertain the three hundred persons who will visit that city October 9th to 11th for the purpose of attending the thirty-second annual conven- tion of the directors of the poor and charities of Pennsylvania. Many delegates are like. wise expected from the children’s aid socie- ties. The meetings will be held in the court house. Some very interesting papers will be read. —Coal has been siruck in the third opening at the Broad Top Coal and Mineral compa- ny's mines at Jacobs, in the Rock Ridge field, Huntingdon county, after two months’ work on the drift. Side tracks, a tipple and scales are being placed so that shipments can be made from the new open- ing at once. The company is now mining and shipping from 175 to 190 tons of coal daily and expect to soon increase their daily output to 250 tons. —Papers were filed in the State Depart- ment at Harrisburg, last Friday, merging the Susquehanna Central, Tioga and Clinton and the Pittsburg, Binghamton and Eastern milroad company, and providing fer the construction and operation of a line in Clear- field, Clinton, Centre, Lycoming, Elk, Tio- ga and Bradford counties, in Pennsylvania, starting at Hyner, Clearfield county, and ex- tending to Binghamton, New York. The cap- ital stock of the company is $20,000,000. The papers name F. A. Sawyer, of Canton, Pa., resid ent. | 1